Watkins v. Acker

111 S.W.2d 458, 195 Ark. 203, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 20, 1937
Docket4-4879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 458 (Watkins v. Acker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Acker, 111 S.W.2d 458, 195 Ark. 203, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 162 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

Butler, J.

This ease came originally to this court on appeal from a judgment of the lower court approving the settlement of the appellant as executor of the estate of S. M. Acker, deceased. The judgment was reversed and, upon mandate being filed in the trial court, appellant moved to transfer the cause to equity. The motion was overruled and the case heard on certain evidence and stipulation of counsel. The court restated the account of the executor and charged him with the total sum of $3,121.01, which included demands against the estate in the sum of $1,926.12 paid out by the executor and not probated in the manner prescribed by statute. The court, in its order, -specifically found: “Each and all of which said claims thus paid by the executor the court finds to have been owing by S. M.-Acker at the time of his death, and remaining unpaid on the date of the payment thereof by said executor, the payment of which could have been enforced against said estate if same had been properly probated as required by law. ” After having saved exceptions to the order- and judgment of the court and having prayed and been granted an. appeal to this court, appellant filed a renewal of his motion to transfer to equity on the theory that he was entitled to subrogation as to the rights of the creditors of the estate whose claims had been discharged, and, on the further ground that “in its finding and judgment herein this court has found and declared that said claims paid by him as such executor in the total si,im of $1,926.12, . ... were legal, valid and subsisting claims against said estate at the date of the payment thereof by said executor, by reason of which said finding he is entitled to be subrogated to all of the rights of the persons to whom said claims were paid as of the date of the.payment thereof as against the estate of S. M. Acker, deceased, and this court is without power to grant him said relief or any other proper relief with respect thereto.”

The motion was overruled, and in the order denying its prayer reference was made to the finding of fact of the court in its judgment, and, with permission of the court, the motion to transfer was renewed and, the same being-overruled, exceptions were saved.

Quoting the language of appellant: “The appeal is based upon the ground that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to transfer to equity, this error being apparent upon the face of the judgment of the court itself. The cause should have been transferred for the reason that under the undisputed facts, as well as under the finding and judgment of the court, the appellant was entitled to the application of the doctrine of sub-rogation, and for that reason that, even if the doctrine of subrogation does not apply, appellant was entitled to equitable relief under the maxim that ‘Equity will not suffer a wrong without a remedy,’ a court of law being without power to grant relief in either case. ’ ’

Counsel for the litigants have devoted much of their briefs to a discussion of the doctrine of subrogation and its applicability to the state of facts as found to exist by the trial court with relation to the claims against the estate paid by the executor. Appellant quotes from the textwriters who state the doctrine of subrogation and our decisions which have applied it contending that these cases are authority for the contention made by him. Ap-pellee insists that the doctrine has no application and that the cases cited in which it was applied for the relief of those who had discharged debts for which they were entitled to subrogation are based on facts essentially different from those in the case at bar. We pass a consideration of this question for the reason that appellant, in seeking to invoke that doctrine, is met at the threshold of his case with two insuperable obstacles; first, the opinion of this court in the case of Acker v. Watkins, 193 Ark. 192, 100 S. W. 2d 78, the instant case being but a, continuation of that proceeding. The opinion in that case reversed the judgment of the court below approving the account current of the executor and remanding the cause with directions to the circuit court ‘‘'to restate the account charging the executor with the amounts he paid on unprobated claims, and with all collections he made or should have made for the estate upon notes and rents from the real estate.” The mandate issued and filed in the court below contained this direction. The language of the mandate is imperative and leaves nothing to the discretion of the trial court in so far as it relates to the unprobated claims. The general rule, and the one adopted by this court early in its history, is that whatever is before the Supreme Court and disposed of in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction must be considered as settled and the lower court must carry that judgment into execution according to its mandate. In the case of Fortenberry v. Frazier, 5 Ark. 200, 39 Am. Dec. 373, this court declared the law to be:

“Whatever was 'before the court, and is disposed of, is considered as finally settled. The inferior court is bound by the judgment or decree as the law of the case, and must carry it into execution according to the mandate. The inferior court cannot vary it, or judicially examine it for any other purpose than execution. It can give no other or further relief as to any matter decided by the Supreme Court even where there is error apparent; or in any manner intermeddle with it further than to execute the mandate, and settle such matters as have been remanded, not adjudicated by the Supreme Court. . . . The principles above stated are, we think, conclusively established by the authority of adjudged cases. And any further departure from them would inevitably mar the harmony of the whole judiciary system, bring its parts into conflict, and produce therein disorganization, disorder, and incalculable mischief and confusion. Besides, any rule allowing the inferior courts to disregard the adjudications of the Supreme Court, or to refuse or omit to carry them into execution would be repugnant to the principles established by the Constitution, and, therefore, void.”

A number of cases might be cited following and reaffirming the rule above quoted, but it is sufficient to say that there has been no impairment of the doctrine stated, supra, and it has been adhered to as late as the case of Arkansas Baptist College v. Dodge, 189 Ark. 592, 74 S. W. 2d 645. In that case the direction of this court to the lower court was to sustain appellant’s plea of res judi-cata and to dismiss the complaint of appellee for want of equity. On remand, the trial court attempted to vary from the mandate by permitting appellee to file other pleadings. This court issued a writ of prohibition forbidding the chancellor to enter any decree except as mentioned in the mandate. In doing so, we said: “From the paragraph of the opinion quoted, it definitely appears that the cause was reversed with specific directions to enter a decree in accordance with the opinion. Therefore, there was nothing for the chancellor to do but enter a decree dismissing the complaint for want of equity. ’ ’

Second, the case arose in the probate court and related to a subject-matter over which it had exclusive jurisdiction. Accordingly, the circuit court on appeal had no authority to transfer the cause to the chancery court.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 458, 195 Ark. 203, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-acker-ark-1937.